| Literature DB >> 30782868 |
Yao Liu1,2, Nicholas J Zupan1, Rebecca Swearingen1,2, Nora Jacobson3, Julia N Carlson1, Jane E Mahoney4, Ronald Klein1, Timothy D Bjelland5, Maureen A Smith2,6.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Teleophthalmology for diabetic eye screening is an evidence-based intervention substantially underused in US multipayer primary care clinics, even when equipment and trained personnel are readily available. We sought to identify patient and primary care provider (PCP) barriers, facilitators, as well as strategies to increase teleophthalmology use.Entities:
Keywords: diabetic retinopathy; organisation of health services; public health; qualitative research; telemedicine
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30782868 PMCID: PMC6398662 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-022594
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Patient and primary care provider demographics
| Participant characteristics | Median or percentage |
| Patients (n=20) | |
| Age | 67 years (range: 46–86 years) |
| Male | 55 |
| Ethnicity (self-reported) | |
| Caucasian, non-Hispanic | 100 |
| Diagnosis of type 2 diabetes | 100 |
| Had teleophthalmology screening | 50 |
| Duration of diabetes | |
| <5 years | 40 |
| 5–19 years | 30 |
| 20+ years | 30 |
| Highest level of education | |
| College graduate | 10 |
| Some college/tech school | 30 |
| High school graduate or General Education Diploma (GED) | 35 |
| Some high school | 15 |
| Grade 8 or less | 10 |
| Health literacy | |
| High | 85 |
| Moderate | 10 |
| Low | 5 |
| Primary care providers (n=9) | |
| Male | 77.8 |
| Training background | |
| Physician | 44.4 |
| Physician Assistant-Certified (PA-C) | 33.3 |
| Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) | 11.1 |
| Registered Nurse (RN) | 11.1 |
| Years in practice | |
| >10 years | 77.8 |
| 5–10 years | 0 |
| 0–5 years | 22.2 |
| Have referred patients for teleophthalmology | 87.5 |
Patient and primary care provider barriers and facilitators
| Patients | Barriers |
Unfamiliar with teleophthalmology.* Misconceptions about diabetic eye screening.* Logistical challenges* (eg, time, transportation, out-of-pocket cost). Eye problems requiring in-person examination (eg, glasses or glaucoma). Anxiety about receiving bad news regarding their eyes. |
| Facilitators |
Recommendation from primary care provider.* Convenience of teleophthalmology* (eg, same-day scheduling, location, quick). Belief that diabetic eye screening is important for preventing vision loss. Knowing that pharmacologic pupil dilation is usually not necessary. Teleophthalmology is considered a high-quality service due to University affiliation. | |
| Primary care providers | Barriers |
Difficulty identifying when patients are due for diabetic eye screening.* Unfamiliar with teleophthalmology.* Time constraints (eg, many competing tasks during clinic visit). Concerns about conflicts with local eye doctors. Concerns about patients’ barriers (eg, out-of-pocket cost). |
| Facilitators |
Ease of referral process and results communication.* Perceived benefits to patients (eg, convenience, cost). Improved patient adherence with diabetic eye screening. Benefits to the healthcare organisation (eg, increased reimbursement for improved quality metrics). |
*Top barrier or facilitator identified at patient or primary care provider stakeholder meeting.
Figure 1Barriers in the teleophthalmology referral process. PCP, primary care provider; Pt, patient.
Strategies to increase teleophthalmology use mapped to Chronic Care Model (CCM)
| CCM component | Target | Examples of strategies |
| Health system organisation and | Health system, PCPs and clinic staff |
Workflow changes including clinic staff checklists and delegation of referrals.* Provider/staff training to increase familiarity with teleophthalmology.* Convenient scheduling and location.* Provide financial incentives to individual PCPs for diabetic eye screening performance. |
| Decision support and | Health system, PCPs and clinic staff |
Best practice alert in EHR when the patient is due for diabetic eye screening.* Streamline processes for getting diabetic eye screening documentation into EHR.* Provide PCPs with feedback/data on diabetic eye screening performance (eg, quarterly). Generate lists of patients due for diabetic eye screening for clinic staff to contact. |
| Self-management support and | Patients, families, community members and clinic staff |
Patient education materials provided at primary care clinic visits.* Increase education about diabetic eye screening in diabetes self-management classes.* Publicise teleophthalmology services* (eg, local media and community health fairs). PCP clinic staff facilitate diabetic eye screening by calling patients and sending letters when due. |
*Strategies that can address top barriers or facilitators from table 2.
EHR, electronic health record; PCP, primary care provider.